Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin has laid out a sweeping multi-year roadmap dubbed “Lean Ethereum,” framing it as the network’s third major reinvention on a par with the Merge and warning that touching nearly every core component will take three to four years.
The plan aims to replace the machinery underneath Ethereum without breaking the applications running on top of it. It reaches into how the network validates transactions, the cryptography guarding it, how quickly blocks reach finality, and how the chain stores its data.
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Buterin singled out the data-storage redesign as the most disruptive change. Rather than force the entire network onto a new model, developers would preserve the existing state for complex applications while adding more scalable storage types for tokens, NFTs, and most decentralised finance activity.
For simpler applications, Buterin estimated the shift could cut fees by more than tenfold, with migration described as optional but financially attractive rather than mandatory.
Complex, state-heavy systems such as Uniswap would remain on the current architecture, avoiding a forced rewrite. By 2030, the roadmap envisions Ethereum supporting roughly 2 terabytes of traditional state alongside up to 100 terabytes of the new optimised format.
Buterin said quantum safety had “shifted up a LOT in priority,” with quantum-resistant cryptography now threaded throughout the design and the upcoming Hegota upgrade likely to be the last hard fork before the Lean era begins.
Privacy receives a similar promotion. “Privacy is no longer an afterthought; it is a first-class goal,” Buterin stated, adding that new components from the mempool to storage would be designed around how private transactions move through them.
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The post Vitalik’s Ethereum Roadmap: A Near-Total Rebuild Is Coming, and It’ll Take Years appeared first on Crypto News Australia.

